I listen to it all the time.Since most cars have FM, I would expect listeners to prefer KUSC with a very strong FM signal.
I listen to it all the time.Since most cars have FM, I would expect listeners to prefer KUSC with a very strong FM signal.
How much longer until the FCC interprets Saul's endless callsign changes as a DDoS attack against their filing system?And since I know someone will ask, sooner or later:
1993: Standards (as KJQI)
1995: News (as KNNS)
1997: All-Beatles (Jan-Aug) then Broadway Showtunes (as KGIL)
1998: Music Of Your Life
2000: Jazz (as KJAZ)
2002: Standards (as KSUR)
2004: Oldies (as KKGO)
2006: Country
2007: Classical (Feb-Oct, as KMZT), then Talk (as KGIL)
2009: Oldies/Standards hybrid
2011: Classical (as KMZT)
2016: Standards (as KBOQ)
2017: Oldies (as KSUR)
2020: Classical (as KMZT)
2024: Classic Country (as KKGO)
2025: Classical (call letter change to KMZT likely any second now)
Your friends' statement is incorrect. 1260 has been operating in HD Digital for many years now.The whole "digital stereo" thing is a load of hooey. According to a friend in L.A., 1260 is just transmitting a plain analog mono signal, with no trace of either C-Quam or HD Radio.
Maybe Saul still has the HD exciter in the rack, but it hasn't been switched on in years.
Your friends' statement is incorrect. 1260 has been operating in HD Digital for many years now.
No trace of HD Radio digital sidebands when they launched the Classic Country format in October 2024:Your friends' statement is incorrect. 1260 has been operating in HD Digital for many years now.
Should’ve given it more timeI think Saul was hoping the classic country would get more than a .1. It didn't, so back to his first love.
I live in the local coverage area of 1260. Classic Country was absolutely in stereo, as was K-Mozart classical before it and is now K-MZT Classical again. I actually have 2 HD radios to demonstrate.No trace of HD Radio digital sidebands when they launched the Classic Country format in October 2024:
You will find no bigger supporter of Saul than me. But he is in the business of broadcasting to the public. He is not above public criticism.Once again, a reminder about the unique station which operates at 1260 from a transmitter site in the far northern San Fernando Valley:
It is not there to make money. Its sister FM, KKGO/105.1, pays all the bills. And since Saul Levine is the original owner of 105.1 (having put it on the air for the first time way back in 1959), he has no debt service. He paid cash for 1260 back in 1993.
1260 is his personal possession. He does with it whatever he feels like doing. And he has earned the right to do so. He no more cares about KUSC being established in the current format than he was when he was the third all-news station in the market 30 years ago. Most of his reasoning for going Talk was his feeling that the late Michael Jackson still had opinions worth sharing.
So if anyone has any snide remarks about this latest format flip, I would personally appreciate it if they kept those to themselves and not post them here. Saul has the right to expect respect. He's earned it.
He is entitled to his station. he is not entitled to be free from criticism. Is he the only person in the radio community you believe to be above criticism or are there others?Come on, guys. Enough Saul-bashing. I personally find the "wheel of formats" crack an insult to him.
As I tried to point out earlier, 1260 is not your usual radio station by the usual definition. It's more like the Jack format, except instead of "playing what we want" it's "playing what Saul wants".
You all act like his format changes have something to do with being competitive. As I said before, that is the biggest misconception anyone can have about 1260. Isn't the man entitled to have his own personal station, free of criticism?
He is entitled to his station. he is not entitled to be free from criticism. Is he the only person in the radio community you believe to be above criticism or are there others?
I have sort of been there. I began in radio as a go-fer at WCUY, a revenue-less FM in Clevaland. After launching three very successful AM stations in Quito, Ecuador, in 1964-1965, I thought about FM. Since there were none in northern South America, I asked my "friend" at the telecommunications office about getting a license.All in all, we should be coming from the knowledge base that KKGO pays the bills, and 1260 is the rec room. I could only dream of being in Saul’s position and have such discussion taking place about changes I made to an AM station in the year 2025. If I could be so lucky!